Well, I just enjoyed the hell out of this. As the title says, Sam & Max are freelance police. That means they wait in their littered little office till the commissioner calls and sends them after bad trouble in one hotspot or another-- the state fair, the Phillipines, Ancient Egypt, the Moon. Sam is a six-foot dog, who's fairly cheerful so long as no one calls him "McGruff the crime dog"; Max is a three-foot hyperkinetic rabbity thing, as tieboy calls him... a little psychotic, but fun to be with. (That goes for tieboy, too.) All they ask out of life are a boat of a car, mounds of junk food, and the chance to indulge in mindless violence in the name of law enforcement.

It's exceedingly jokey on so many levels. The (slick and accomplished) drawings are packed with gags, Wally Wood style. (There always seem to be cockroaches or rats in the foreground, doing improbable things.) Sam & Max carry on a running commentary on the action (as a cult leader burns to death in front of them: "If we get out of this alive, Max, what do you say we go out for some ribs?"); comment on the artist's drawing ability ("Here we are in the Philippines!" "Drawn without reference material, apparently."), and banter amusingly ("Don't ever say ensuing.").
There's
running gags (their neighbor, private eye Flint Paper, roughing up one cheap thug after another), big-headed aliens, horribly disfigured criminals (notably Mack Salmon), and absurd deus ex machina rescues ("It's the rubber pants commandos!!" "They're my favorite!").

It's not Proust, but I keep it near my desk, re-read it when I want to feel happy, and cite favorite lines to other addicts ("I'm a lagomorph, Sam! Look it up!" "You crack me up, little pal!"). That's quality humor, Jack.

About the only problem is that there isn't much of it. There's one TPB (Surfin' the Highway), and that's it. Well, also a cartoon series that's said to be severely watered down, and an excellent video game.

Update:
Great news: Purcell is creating new Sam & Max comics online. They look beautiful, but they're done with a very weird method-- you have to mouse over the panels to see the dialog (sometimes you get little animations, too). Plus there's no quick way to see the current episode. But it's actual Sam & Max, so, deal with it. Telltale Games is apparently working at some glacial pace on a new Sam & Max game, too.

Aaron McGruder : The Boondocks

I absolutely do not know how this got past the syndicate-- and how it gets published in the Chicago Tribune, which is scared silly by Ernie. There's a lesson here about the paradoxical freedom that white fear
can give to black voices: they can say anything, on the understanding that whites don't have to listen.

Heh. It's not many comic strips that'll make me talk like that. The Boondocks features two inner-city Chicago boys who move with their grandfather halfway across the country to a very nice, very white suburb. Hey, culture clash! Huey is a miniature black radical socialist; his younger brother Riley wants to be a thug as bad as his rapper heroes. Granddad is befuddled by both of them. He's not interested in much besides fishing and watching cable; when the boys get out of hand there's his belt to answer to.

Huey spouts endless black-studies rhetoric, but the main joke of the strip is that what the family encounters is not out-and-out racism but ignorance and puzzlement. It isn't that they're opposed to freeing Mumia-- they don't know who Mumia is. (On the other hand, they're perfectly familiar with Snoop Doggy Dogg and O.J.)

The other joke is that no one takes Huey seriously.
His granddad just ignores his tirades; his brother thinks he's a nerd; the biracial girl next door, Jazmine, sometimes argues with him and sometimes accepts him; the old ladies in the neighborhood pat him on the head. None of this makes the least impression on Huey.

Still, something of his own acerbic worldview seeps through. Few of us are going to buy it all, but we can appreciate his own amusement and frustration with the others-- his low-life-wannabe brother, Afro-denying Jazmine and her over-assimilated father, the hollow pieties of his school, which soberly prepares to reach out
to a disadvantaged child, but doesn't know what to do with an
intelligent, politically rebellious one.

McGruder has obviously learned from Garry Trudeau. His own politics are probably within spitting distance of Huey's; but he gives everybody else a chance to speak, and he lets Huey get to absurd extremes sometimes (Santa Claus is responsible for the crack epidemic). And there are no villains-- at least, no onscreen ones. (Trudeau made the wrong decision, I think, to abandon his own similar policy. His Nixon was on the wrong side, but was recognizably human; his Newt Gingrich was completely humorless.)

The art deserves mention. It's effective in a stylized, sketchy way, and the shading makes it look unlike the other comics on the newspaper page. (Though it makes for a lousy scan.) Curiously, the kids look like nothing so much as manga characters.

Most 'black' strips have chosen a setting in the city-- Jumpstart, Curtis, Wee Pals-- but McGruder senses that to shine a light on race in this country, you need to mix it up, to make worlds collide. And he gets it right more than Hollywood, whose response to multiculturalism is to dampen it down, to pretend that both friendships and street gangs are harmoniously integrated. McGruder's greatest honesty is to show that race relations are still mostly characterized by incomprehension and ignorance. That may be better than outright hatred, but it still can be criticized-- or better yet, mocked.

Ironically, what I think McGruder doesn't come to terms with is precisely the browning of America. Are there really suburban (as opposed to rural) neighborhoods which are still all-white? And why aren't there any Latinos or Asians in this town?

Update:
All this is based on the first trade paperback; Boondocks has gone downhill in much the same way Mordor did when Sauron moved in. There's no story at all now, just Huey running off at the mouth about George Bush. McGruder doesn't even draw it any more. You have to be really, really clever to make political invective work, and he's not even trying any more.